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Active clinical trials for "Coma"

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Development of a Point of Care System for Automated Coma Prognosis

ComaDisorder of Consciousness3 more

Electroencephalogram/event-related potentials (EEG/ERP) data will be collected from 50 participants in coma or other disorder of consciousness (DOC; i.e., Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome [UWS] or Minimally Conscious State [MCS]), clinically diagnosed using the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS). For coma patients, EEG recordings will be conducted for up to 24 consecutive hours at a maximum of 5 timepoints, spanning 30 days from the date of recruitment, to track participants' clinical state. For DOC patients, there will be an initial EEG recording up to 24 hours, with possible subsequent weekly recordings up to 2 hours. An additional dataset from 40 healthy controls will be collected, each spanning up to a 12-hour recording period in order to formulate a baseline. Collected data are to form the basis for automatic analysis and detection of ERP components in DOC, using a machine learning paradigm. Salient features (i.e., biomarkers) extracted from the ERPs and resting-state EEG will be identified and combined in an optimal fashion to give an accurate indicator of prognosis.

Active20 enrollment criteria

Comparison Between High-density Electroencephalography and Conventional Electroencephalography for...

Post Anoxic Coma

The purpose of this study is to measure whether high-density electroencephalography can improve the detection of electrophysiological signs of awareness compared to conventional electroencephalography in post-anoxic comatose patients

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

Beneficial Effects of Music on Cognition and Consciousness Level

Coma

Exposure to music improves cognitive function in 'healthy' participants and in brain-damaged patients. However, it is still difficult to understand what precisely in music causes a positive effect : are they emotional components, familiarity or preference which improve cognition or is there any specific effect of music? Moreover, it is not yet possible to characterize the neural and functional links between the brain systems solicited by music and those associated with other cognitive functions enhanced by music. Finally, researches on brain-damaged patients have not exploited the potential effect of music on the level of alert and perceptual awareness, while this type of stimulation could be a valuable tool to improve cognition in patients with a disturbance of consciousness and alertness. The main objective is to describe the impact of music on the brain's response to self-referential or neutral stimuli in brain-damaged patients with persistent consciousness disorder after a coma and in healthy participants.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Improving Awakening Prognostication After Non Anoxic Coma Using PET-MRI in Intensive Care Unit

Coma

In last decades, several advances in the neuro-intensive management have lead to decrease mortality in Intensive Care Units. A significant morbidity remains as patients survive after a traumatic coma with uncertain quality of awakening and a high risk of functional disability. Predicting awareness recovery and functional disability of those who will awake constitutes a major challenge to inform patients' relatives, to give the best chances in terms of rehabilitation resources or to adapt intensive cares to a reasonable level. Tools currently available are not sufficient neither to predict bad awakening outcome nor to predict good functional outcome. In many countries, life's support cessation is a constant call for robust evaluation as soon as possible in ICU but it is mandatory to reach a positive predictive value of non-awaking close to 100%. Many clinical, electro-physiological, biological, radiological and functional parameters have been conducted with comatose patients assuming the purpose to predict outcome. Regarding unfavourable outcome, the gold standard is the abolition of the N20 component of somatosensory evoked potentials but the specificity is high enough only for patients with anoxic coma. Several neurophysiological markers such as MMN, P300 are correlated to a favourable outcome but the sensitivity and specificity remains low for patients who suffered a severe traumatic brain injury. New Diffusion Tensor imaging sequences provide complementary information to detect small structural lesions (diffuse axonal lesions). Recently, functional MRI analyzing Resting State has also been proposed as a prognostic marker during coma. PET using Fluoro-Desoxy-Glucose is able to assess the metabolism in key regions of the awakening network in either anaesthesia or sleep. Recent studies have reported interesting results at the chronic stage but to knowledge, these tools have only been used to address pathophysiology's issues and never to improve coma prognosis at the initial stage. The investigators hypothesize that the heterogeneity of the population requires a global and accurate assessment of the central nervous system, combining structural, metabolic and functional information in order to refine the prognosis. The protocol integrates in one-sequence most radiological markers of brain injury within a unique PET-MRI in Lyon. The most relevant originality of the study consists in confronting FDG-PET and MRI sequences to a large clinical, electrophysiological and biological battery. The added clinical value would be to question the synergistic effect of each parameter and to find out which ones are the most useful for awakening prediction, as they have not been compared in a multi-parametric database. PET-MRI, as a new device combining physiological and prognostic questioning, allows us: to implement a more integrative physio-pathological analysis to avoid the cofounding effect of awareness' fluctuations in recording simultaneously multiple functional imaging techniques. The RS will be analyzed at 2 epochs in order to assess the stability of brain connectivity, related to neuronal activity (glucose metabolism) and brain perfusion.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Role of Intravenous Lipid Emulsion in Improving Coma of Acute Antipsychotics Poisoning

Coma

Intravenous Lipid Emulsion in Improving Coma Of Antipsychotic drugs Acute Poisoning: A Randomized Controlled Trial in Poison Control Center of Ain Shams University Hospitals

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Brain Network Disruptions Related to Traumatic Coma

Traumatic Coma

To provide a fine-grained description of the brain network dysfunctions induced by severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) or anoxic encephalopathy, that are responsible for the acute state of unarousable unawareness, named coma, this trial wants to explore the usefulness in this setting of a combined neuroimaging approaches encompassing several up-to-date techniques as structural MRI, fMRI and positron emission tomography (PET) scan (neuroinflammation ligands).

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Multimodal Resonance Imaging for Outcome Prediction on Coma Patients

Coma

Stroke, traumatic head injury, subarachnoid hemorrhage and cerebral anoxia are main causes of a coma condition implying severe brain damage and thus, poor prognosis. Clinicians are often in need for a tool able to predict the awakening of these patients. Multimodal MRI, associating the traditional morphological sequences with spectroscopy-MRI (MRS) and the diffusion tensor imaging, could provide such a prediction.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Use of Music and Voice Stimulus on Coma Patients

Coma

Objectives: (1) To check music and voice message influence on vital signs and facial expressions of patients in physiological or induced comas; (2) To connect the existence of patient's responsiveness with the Glasgow Coma Scale or with the Ramsay Sedation Scale. Method: This was a randomized controlled clinical trial with 30 patients, from two Intensive Care Units, being divided in 2 groups (control and experimental). Their relatives recorded a voice message and chose a song according to the patient's preference. The patients were submitted to 3 sessions for 3 consecutive days.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Adherence Degree of Kasr-Alaini Hospital Pre-anesthetic Tests to the NICE-UK Guidelines

AnesthesiaSurgery1 more

Routine preoperative tests aim to identify asymptomatic diseases that can't be recognized by history and examination. Identification and management of these diseases is thought to help minimizing perioperative morbidity and mortality. A large number of routine screening tests increase the cost of perioperative care. Also unneeded tests may harm the patient due to overtreatment for borderline / false positive results. Therefore, the routine use of such examinations remains controversial. The National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE-UK) guidelines for preoperative examination are the assessment standard developed by NICE in collaboration with the National Collaboration Center for Acute Care in the UK; in order to reduce unnecessary tests by recommending which tests should be offered to people before minor and major operations. The aim of this study is to assess the degree of adherence of the current preoperative tests at Kasr Alaini hospital to the NICE guidelines, to assess the effectiveness and usefulness of the current practice of various examinations ordered by anesthesiologists during the pre-anesthetic evaluation in patients who are intended for elective surgery in the hospital and to also evaluate the cause of delay & its effect to predict postoperative complications.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Using EEG to Study Coma in the Neurocritical Care Unit

Coma

Despite its clinical significance, the pathophysiology of coma is still under investigation and the physiology of emergence from coma remains a mystery. Furthermore, predictors of emergence from coma, despite their obvious clinical value, remain un-established. Because of its low arousal state and hypothesized parallel neurophysiological mechanisms, sleep has been studied as both an animal and human model of coma, and awakening from sleep has likewise been studied as a surrogate of coma emergence. In this study, we will determine whether certain electrographic patterns, known as spectral shifts, which have correlates in normal sleep, are predictive of eventual awakening from coma and the time course of this emergence. To detect spectral shifts in comatose patients, EEG monitoring must be performed for several days. Quick, simple, and reliable EEG recording in the ICU will be enhanced by a small device that can be easily and properly positioned on the head by hospital personnel and which lacks cumbersome cables or receivers. Traditional EEG monitoring requires placement of up to 25 wires, which can impede efficient intensive patient care. Our hypothesis is that we can detect a difference in spectral shifts in comatose patients who will eventually emerge from coma as compared to comatose patients who do not wake up and that a wireless EEG patch-type device can effectively make this distinction.

Completed0 enrollment criteria

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